Loyola to Host Inaugural Conference of Walker Percer Center, 10/14 - 16
By: Caryn Robbins Oct. 04, 2011
Loyola University New Orleans will celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Walker Percy's novel, The Moviegoer, by hosting a conference about the Southern writer Oct. 14-16 on its main campus. Walker Percy, a prominent Catholic novelist, taught at Loyola during the 1970s, and several of his former students will be returning to honor the author and the novel.
The conference, which is open to the public, begins at noon on Oct. 14, in the J. Edgar and Louise S. Monroe Library and will offer a variety of panel topics focused on Percy's best-known novel-its contexts, its effects, its influences and its place in American and Southern literary history. Registration will be in the "Living Room," located on the first floor of the library.A reception on Friday evening at 5 p.m. will be followed by keynote speaker Jay Tolson at 6 p.m., one of Percy's most respected biographers and a lively commentator on contemporary culture, politics, society and religion. Both the reception and the keynote take place in the Audubon Room, located in the Danna Student Center. Tolson's 1992 biography, "Pilgrim in the Ruins: A Life of Walker Percy," won the Southern Book Award and the Hugh Holman Prize for outstanding scholarship in Southern literary studies. He also edited "The Correspondence of Shelby Foote & Walker Percy" and is currently the news director of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.An optional visit to St. Joseph's Abbey in Covington, where Percy is now buried, is planned for Oct. 16. The trip will include Mass for those who wish to attend, and a visit to Percy's grave. A bus will depart from the Marquette Horseshoe at 8:30 a.m.

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